Literature DB >> 21555095

Severe maternal morbidity among immigrant women in the Netherlands: patients' perspectives.

Marina Jonkers1, Annemiek Richters, Joost Zwart, Ferko Öry, Jos van Roosmalen.   

Abstract

This 2006 study investigated ethnicity-related factors contributing to sub-standard maternity care and the effects on severe maternal morbidity among immigrant women in the Netherlands. In-depth interviews were carried out with 40 immigrant and 10 native Dutch women. The immigrant women reported that health care providers often paid insufficient attention to their pregnancy-related complaints, especially in cases of pre-eclampsia. They also reported delays in receiving information about diagnosis and treatment. Obstetricians who reviewed 20 of these cases judged sub-standard care to have played a role in the development of complications in 16 of them. The women themselves had problems identifying medically significant complications, presenting their complaints to health care providers effectively, and taking an active role as patients. Even highly educated migrant women showed low health literacy skills in their interaction with doctors. Patients' perspectives are valuable as one of the tools to evaluate the quality of maternity care. Communication by maternal health professionals can be improved through more sensitivity to social factors that affect immigrant women's health problems. Women with limited health literacy should be empowered through education about danger signs in pregnancy and information about preferences and policies in obstetrics in the Netherlands. They should also be invited to participate in medical decision-making.
Copyright © 2011 Reproductive Health Matters. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21555095     DOI: 10.1016/S0968-8080(11)37556-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Reprod Health Matters        ISSN: 0968-8080


  18 in total

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8.  Ethnic variations in severe maternal morbidity in the UK- a case control study.

Authors:  Manisha Nair; Jennifer J Kurinczuk; Marian Knight
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-04-17       Impact factor: 3.240

9.  Delays in receiving obstetric care and poor maternal outcomes: results from a national multicentre cross-sectional study.

Authors:  Rodolfo C Pacagnella; José G Cecatti; Mary A Parpinelli; Maria H Sousa; Samira M Haddad; Maria L Costa; João P Souza; Robert C Pattinson
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10.  The midwife-woman relationship in a South Wales community: Experiences of midwives and migrant Pakistani women in early pregnancy.

Authors:  Laura Goodwin; Billie Hunter; Aled Jones
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